preview

Holden Caulfield's Depression In The Catcher In The Rye

Decent Essays

Depression is paralyzing, but mostly it is terrifying. In The Catcher in the Rye, Holden Caulfield is displayed as a deeply sad person. He cannot handle the emotions that are plaguing him and thus projects them on everyone else. Holden is so terrified of his sadness he blames others for it, throughout the novel he constantly says phrases along the lines of, “they depress me”. His actions can be explained as a type of projection. Projection is defined as “ascribing our fear, problem... to someone else and then condemning him… in order to deny we have it ourselves,”(Tyson 14). His emotions have left him in a sanitarium where he is talking to a psychoanalysis, which is where his flashback begins. From this, one example of projection is one many teenagers have come to be familiar with; it consists of blaming others for “making” them feel angry or dejected. He or she takes himself out of the equation by putting the other in the wrong for their own feelings. Holden seems to be rather use …show more content…

The traits he hates in others is, in truth, what he thinks or does that he loathes. Holden hates himself. This idea comes across as his favorite word, “phony”. So just as it is other’s fault for his sadness, it is their actions that are what is wrong with the world and not his own. A very black and white moment of this is when Holden visits Phoebe’s school and on the walls someone has written “fuck you” (J. D. Salinger 221). He is incredibly disgusted with the person who wrote it, he is angered enough to want to end them. Of course, the scene is not complete without Holden stating “that made me even more depressed” (221). From the black comes the white, only 6 pages later Holden shouts at his sister to shut up . He is completely cruel to her, an action, if he had seen in another, would have him writing that it depressed him. Holden is his favorite word, he is

Get Access